Tag Archives: #0484

Snowbunnie (#2256) and Suzie King have found a forever home. The rest need to find homes ASAP. Check back often as we will be adding other Internet 3-Strikers to the list. Please help network homes for these wonderful wild horses with bad pictures. It’s not their fault.

Don’t let anyone discourage you from helping wild horses and burros get to safety. There are a lot of PRO-SLAUGHTER Activists (PSA) who have infiltrated into the cause and are pretending to be “logical”. The truth is they lie to get what they want. The want to make sure there is an overflow of wild horses in holding to tip the scales in their favor. They lobby for back-room deals with elected officials, BoLM, etc. to sell America’s icons of freedom to slaughter.

If you decide to save a pair of at-risk 3-Strikes wild horses and purchase them for $25 each, the BoLM can’t hold anything over your head. You don’t have to wait a year for title to your beloved mustangs and play “nice”. 3-Strikes, sale eligible wild horses become yours as soon as you have the bill of sale and after that you don’t need to deal with BoLM poking into your business.

Important Info:

Go here for information about the Internet Adoption and Sale: https://www.blm.gov/adoptahorse/index.php The first thing you need to do is get approved. Approval for adoption is different than approval for purchase

Adoption or purchase confirmation for these wild horses must be finalized, by email to BLM_ES_INET_Adoption@blm.gov, no later than Noon Mountain-Time September 15. After this date, all unclaimed mustangs will be available for in-person walk up adoption or purchase ONLY.

If you need help contact us at Contact@ProtectMustangs.org

Protect Mustangs is a 501c3 nonprofit organization who protects and preserves native and wild horses.

Why isn’t the Bureau of Land Management making a sale to safety happen?

Many people have shown interest in buying 6-year-old Nellie Diamond (#0484) but she still has no bid listed on her page and the auction is over. Is the BoLM returning email inquiries and phone calls? She can be adopted or sold. With sale the purchaser gets title of her immediately. With adoption she can be returned to BoLM if the adopter wants to. Of course then she would have another strike . . . Might be best to get her to a sanctuary with her friend Star Creek (#1483). The pair would only cost $50 and 2 lives would be saved.

Star Creek (#1483) is a sweet 6-yr-old mare from Fish Creek, NV who was rounded up last year to forcibly drug the mares with Pesticide PZP– made from slaughterhouse pig ovaries. Now Star Creek has 3-Strikes from failed adoptions and is another RED ALERT wild horse now at-risk!

This lovely wild mare wasn’t picked because she’s ‘plain” even though she seems very sweet with a special star. Now she’s at risk of being sold to a horse trader who might sell her to a kill-buyer for slaughter.

Please share Nellie Diamond (#0484) and Star Creek (#1483) so together they can go to a loving home or sanctuary!

Here is some basic information:

This horse is currently located in Palomino Valley, NV. For more information, please contact Jeb Beck at (775) 475-2222 or e-mail: j1beck@blm.gov

This horse is available for sale or adoption with bids staring at $25.00. At the conclusion of the bidding, the successful bidder will inform the BLM if they are purchasing or adopting the animal. If the animal is purchased, not adopted, the successful bidder receives bill of sale to the animal upon completion of payment and final paperwork. If the animal is adopted, the minimum bid must be $125, and the animal is not eligible for title until the one year anniversary.

Adoption confirmation for this animal must be finalized, by e-mail to BLM_ES_INET_Adoption@blm.gov, no later than Noon Mountain August 4. After this date, all unclaimed animals will be available for in-person walk up adoption/purchase ONLY.

Update August 10: BLM said, “If no bids were placed on an animal in the last internet and a bidder that didn’t get the horse they choose as first pick didn’t decide to take a horse with no bid then those horses with no bids are available for pickup at PVC till August 22. After that date any remaining horses will be put on the next internet adoption. . . horses are available for pick up FROM PVC ONLY we will not ship as the truck is full at this point.”

It’s not her fault she wasn’t picked! Help Nellie Diamond (#0484) find a safe home.

Nellie Diamond (#0484) is on the Internet Adoption and offered for sale $25. She seems to have been deeply hurt by losing her home and her herd after the Bureau of Land Management (BoLM) roundup 3 years ago. No one is taking the time to see beyond her loneliness. Nellie Diamond might do well with a sister mustang from her herd–the Diamonds out of Nevada. Once she is treated with love, patience and respect Nellie will shine like a Diamond too.

Nellie can be shipped out to any of the locations listed below for free and then you need to transport her home from there.

BoLM says:

Sex: Mare Age: 6 Years Height (in hands): 13.3

Necktag #: 0484 Date Captured: 02/03/13

Freezemark: 10620484 Signalment Key: HF1AAAAAG

Color: Gray Captured: Diamond (NV)

Notes:

Tag-#0484. 6 year old gray mare rounded up from the Diamond Herd Management Area in Nevada in February of 2013.

This wild horse is currently located in Palomino Valley, NV. For more information, please contact Jeb Beck at (775) 475-2222 or e-mail: j1beck@blm.gov

This wild horse is available for sale or adoption with bids staring at $25.00. At the conclusion of the bidding, the successful bidder will inform the BoLM if they are purchasing or adopting the animal. If the animal is purchased, not adopted, the successful bidder receives bill of sale to the animal upon completion of payment and final paperwork. If the animal is adopted, the minimum bid must be $125, and the animal is not eligible for title until the one year anniversary.

Adoption confirmation for this wild horse must be finalized, by e-mail to BLM_ES_INET_Adoption@blm.gov, no later than Noon Mountain August 4. After this date, all unclaimed wild horses will be available for in-person walk up adoption/purchase ONLY.

Diamond Complex Herd Management Areas

The Complex involves three HMAs, and areas outside of HMAs: the Diamond HMA is managed by the Battle Mountain District, the Diamond Hills North HMA by the Elko District and the Diamond Hills South (and areas outside of HMA boundaries) by the Ely District. Because the wild horses move around the HMAs across the Diamond Mountain Range, the three Districts work together to manage the Complex, according to BoLM.

Protect Mustangs is an organization who protects and preserves native and wild horses.